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AUTOMATIC SEED PLANTEB.

(Application led May 2, 1898.)

(No Model.)

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GUS'IAF VON POST, OF SAFSJOSTROM, SVEDEN.

AUTOMATIC SEED-PLANTEPL SPECIFICATION forming part of Letters Patent No. 608,793, dated August 9, 1898. Application iiled May Z, 1898. Serial No. 679,452. (No model.)

T all whom it may concern:

Be it known that I, GUsTAF vonV P Os'r,

engineer, of Sat'sjostrom, in the county of Smaland, Kingdom of Sweden, do hereby declare the nature of myinveution for Improvements in Automatic Seed-Planters and in what manner the same is to be performed to be particularly describedand ascertained in and by the following statement.

The operation of sowing forest seeds in the manner heretofore usual trouble and expense. Ohiely on this account the large majority of forest-owners neglect restoring their worked-oit districts into forestbearing land by planting seeds therein, relying instead on the natural sowing'process, which, however, owing to its irregularity and uncertainty, in most cases leaves a great deal to be desired.

The present invention relates to an apparatus by means of which one man, without appreciable difficulty or trouble, canin one day plant seeds over a greater territory than can be done in several working days in the usual manner of. sowing, saidapparatus,

moreover, planting the seeds in a mannery closely resembling the natural sowing.

The apparatus is illustrated in the accompanying drawings.

Figure l is a longitudinal View, partly in section; Fig. 2, a vertical section of the cylders; Figs. 3 and G, rear views, partly in section, of the apparatus in two ditterent positions; Fig. 4:, the apparatus viewed'from below, and Fig. 5 a detail view of the stud and of one of the arms placed therein.

The apparatus is preferably to be arranged at the hind end of a plate intended to be attached to the bottom of the foot and provided for this purpose with suitable fastening devices-for instance, a clamping-piece b, located at the rear end of the plate and adapted to be pressed against the heel of the shoe by means of a screw a, and a couple of ears d at the under side of the plate, through which a strap may be passed and laid over the fore part of the foot. The apparatus proper, which evidently may be attached under the heel of the shoe in any other manner, consists of a ring or cylinder g, open at the bottom, said ring being rigidly attached to the heel end and made to embrace a second involves great cylinder f, which is closed at the bottom and can move up and down in the former. The latter cylinder is covered by a lid k, itsinterior thus forming a closed chamber Z, and said chamber embraces an immovable spike or stud fm, pointed at the lower end and passso as to not quite till the slit) and at the ,top

with a lug projecting beyond the circumference of the stud.

The interior of the ring g, by means of a tube o vand a hose p, attached to it, is connected with a seed-magazine hopper, which is carried, for instance, by a belt fixed around the waist of the person using the apparatus. The lid 7c is provided with an aperture leading to the chamber Z, but covered by a cap q,

which has a second aperture located directly` oppositethe outlet of the tube o, said aperture being' shifted upward'past the outlet of the tube o when the cylinder f is pressedupward. In orderto prevent rotary motion of the cylinder f as it moves up and down and to always keep the above-mentioned aperture of the cap g in its correct position in relation to the outlet of the tube o, guide-strips r, Fig. 2, are arranged at the inner side of the ring g. By this arrangement the advantage is gained that the seeds do not clog in the tube o and that there will be a regular feed at the proper time into the seed-chamber Z, while at the same time 'the seeds are not injured in passing from the tube 0 to the movable cylinder f.

The apparatus operates as follows: `When the heel is placed on the ground, the cylinder f is pressed up into the ring g and the lower part of the stud orspike mis uncovered, the spike at the same time entering to a corresponding depth into the ground and making a hole in it. As the cylinder f moves upconsequently being swung outward through the end of the slit that now lies outside the cylinder f and the arms throwing out the seeds collected outside them in the lower part of the slit into the hole made by the spike or stud in the ground. When the foot is again lifted, the cylinder f is returned to its original position by the spring d, and a fresh quantity of seeds is introduced into the seed-chamber Z from the hose p through the cap q, which in this position of the cylinder communicates with the tube or passage o. In the next step with the foot the cylinder f is again raised and a fresh quantity of seeds is thrown out, while at the same time the seedchamber is shut off from the seed-magazine by the elevation of the orifice of the cap above the outlet of the tube o.

springs which act to press the lower ends of said arms outward as soon as the said ends project beyond the cylinder.

with the stud or spike. In actual trials it has been found that the apparatus deposits on an average seven seeds a step, which corresponds to a seed consumption of approxi-j mately 3.8 hectograms of pine-seed per hectare when the number of steps is twelve thousand.

repairs and inspection.

not when it is wet.

The apparatus can evidently be used fori planting all kinds of seed, though being es- Q pecially adapted for forest-seed planting.

Having now particularly described the nature of my said invention and in what manner the same is to be performed, I declare that what I claim isl. An improved automatic seed-planter consisting of a ring or guiding-cylinder g,adapted to be attached under the foot, and a cylinder f movable in the former and depressed by a spring, said cylinder containing a chamber Z which is in communication with a seed-magazine and embraces a stud m projecting through its bottom and provided with a vertical slit in which are located one or more arms n fulcrumed at their upper ends and acting to discharge the seed from in front of them when the movable cylinder f rises through contact with the ground.

2. A seed-planter comprising a guidingcylinder g, a movable cylinder j' having a chamber Z with a lid 7a having an aperture therein, a cover for said aperture having an opening opposite a seed-inlet opening in the wall of the guiding-cylinder and a supplypipe leading to the inlet-opening in the guiding-cylinder, the movement of the cylinder At every step of the foot, to which the apparatus is attached, a quantity of seeds will i thus be deposited in the ground just below l the surface and at the edge of the hole made f serving to open and close communication between the supply-pipe and the chamber f, substantially as described.

3. A seed-planter comprising an outer cylinder with a supply-pipe leading thereto from an opening in the wall thereof and an inner cylinder having a chamber with a dischargeopening leading therefrom, the said inner cylinder being movably supported in relation to the outer cylinder and being adapted by 1 its vertical movement to control the seed- The use of the apparatus involves no trou- Q ble, and it can be readily taken apart for It is intended to be used only when the ground is dry or damp, i

supply, substantially as described.

In witness whereof I have hereunto set my hand in presence of two witnesses.

eusrnr von Pos'rf Witnesses:

H. TELANDER, T. RIsBERG. 

